Changing Fortunes
Part 1
"A hundred thousand
credits? You've got to be fucking kidding, Balint!"
He wasn't. Especially when
he said the magic word that made Cam want to slap him.
"But it's an opportunity, kiddo!"
Everything was an
opportunity to Balint, his partner in crime.
"Yeah? For who?" Cam demanded.
Balint gave him those puppy dog eyes that always melted Cam's heart.
"For us, baby."
Cam rolled his eyes. That was Balint's
answer for everything. The money they made was for them so eventually; they
would never have to work again and could just lounge around on the beach in
some deserted island and fuck like bunnies. The only problem was that the
money was never enough and Balint liked to spend it
on stupid stuff as fast as they made it.
Like the silver studded cap
he had on his head now. Him and his fucking caps!
"Did it ever occur to
you to wonder why the take was so
high, dumbass?"
Cam didn't even wait for Balint's answer
because he knew it. Balint didn't wonder. Balint didn't care at all, as long as the money was in
his hand by the end of the job. And if the money wasn't, there'd be two hits
for the price of one.
Balint may be easy going and charming but he didn't fuck around when
it came to money and neither did Cam.
The money wasn't the only
red flag. "Sarin, Balint?
You know his rep, why would you ever accept a job from him?"
"Because this one is a
no-can-miss, buddy. Easy. Easy money."
Cam was beginning to sense a deja-vu
happening. "You really think it's just a hit on a troublesome kid?"
Balint pouted; something he always did when he saw that Cam was going to
fight him. "Of course not."
Cam waited for the other shoe to drop.
"We're going to have to
take out his boss, too."
"His boss?" Cam exclaimed,
completely floored by Balint's blindness to
anything that even reeked of danger as long as the coinage was high enough.
"His boss just happens to Ardoin Beauduget, one of the most powerful padrones
in Sargot City and from what I've heard; it'll be hard enough to ice the kid."
Balint had said that Sarin's official
reason was that this kid was a fox in Sarin's
henhouse, stealing the chicken right from under him. Cam had been in this
business for a good many of his twenty one years and as profitable as Sarin's Pet trade was, he knew that this hit was
personal: a smackdown for the unpardonable sin of
fucking around with Sarin's property.
"Cammie, Cammie," Balint shook his
head, "so negative. Just think of the palm trees." He planted
kisses on Cam's neck. "Think of the waves."
Cam sighed, trying to ignore Balint's
lips. "Think of the rumors."
Balint's fingers unbuttoned Cam's shirt. "That's all they are, Cam-Cam. Rumors."
Rumors like the owner of the
club known as the Nocturne was actually the head of the Underground: an
outfit whose main objective was to overthrow the World Association of Superior Persons and
who had also become one of the major crime syndicates in the area. Chances
were that Beauduget's enforcer was probably as much
of an assassin as Cam and Balint were, or Sarin wouldn't be so hot to get rid of him.
But it wasn't those rumors that made Cam edgy; it was
the other ones that were said in hushed tones as if to say them was to bring
evil upon themselves. Things like some people went into the Nocturne but
didn't come out. Tales of beautiful boys and girls who lured the unwitting
into their beds -- and to their deaths. Whispers of mutants. Demons.
Monsters.
However, Cam was not about
to mention all that to Balint because it was a
waste of time. One would think that Balint -- who
came from a long line of Gyspies -- would heed the
warnings. Nope. It wasn't that Balint didn't accept them as true. He did. He just didn't
care. To him, a job was a job, and money was money. The Rom lifestyle he'd
been raised in may have made him a good grifter but
he didn't let it interfere when it came to the almighty credit.
Instead, Cam said,
"There's truth to every rumor," but Cam let Balint slip the shirt off his shoulders and push him face
down on top of the mattress on the floor.
Balint straddled Cam's lower back." You need to relax, Cam," Balint said, his skilled fingers kneading the tension out
of Cam's shoulders and the back of his neck. "Would I put us in
a situation that we can't handle?"
Balint felt they could handle anything so the question was really a
rhetorical one, but his magic fingers were doing their job and Cam felt himself
begin to loosen up. Then he began to trail kisses along Cam's shoulders
and nibble down his spine. Balint wanted this badly
but Cam couldn't afford to relent, or allow himself to give in when
there was so much at stake. If only he had a better idea of what they were up
against, or what their chances were.
Then he realized that there
was a way of finding all that out. It would probably piss Balint
off, but Cam knew his partner would do it if it was the only way to ensure
Cam's cooperation. "Sarin isn't
sweetening the pot for nothing. Tell me what will be in store for us."
Balint knew what he meant because he instantly stopped his massaging
and removed his hands. "Shit, Cameron," he said quietly. "I do
that for gadjos.
Not us."
Gadjos were
outsiders. Technically, since Cameron wasn't a Gypsy, that made him a gadjo as well
but Balint didn't see it that way.
Cam ignored the silent storm brewing in Balint's
hazel eyes. "But you'll do it now." It wasn't a question.
Balint gave a slight nod but didn't say a word.
Cam got off the mattress and
walked to the kitchen, which was in the same room as the living room.
Underneath the sink was what Balint called
"the bag of tricks." This bag was for the other things they fell
back on in between jobs. Home remedies that were useless. Three cups and the
ball that traveled between them. Loaded dice. All kinds of swindles and cons
that kept food on their table and a roof over their heads. But that wasn't
what Cam was after.
He reached inside and pulled
out the box that held Balint's deck of cards. The
deck that would give Cam the answers he so desperately sought.
When he walked back into the
bedroom, Balint was already sitting at the desk.
"I don't know why you're demanding this. You don't believe in
Tarot."
Cam stood behind him. "No, but you do." Cam handed Balint the deck of Tarot
cards and the other boy began to lay the cards down.
Cam had seen these spreads many times before. He didn't know what
they meant and up until now, he never cared. Balint could have told the fortunes of
those who he laid the cards down for but he'd explained long ago that people
really didn't want the truth. In fact, telling them what he really saw in the
spreads could get them killed if it wasn't what the person wanted to hear. It
was for that very reason that both of them always carried when they knew that
Balint would do some fortune telling that night.
Balint stopped for a moment. "Cam, I'm only
doing this because I know you'll give me no peace otherwise. Understand
that."
"And because you want
to make me happy."
Balint finished the spread and put the deck down, reaching behind to
pull Cam to him. "That too."
He smiled a little. "Especially if calming you down will get you
in the mood for other things besides fortune telling."
Cam had already been headed there but he wasn't going to tell Balint. "Just flip the cards and don't feed me the
same bullshit you feed the suckers. Tell me what you really see."
"Cam, Cam, Cam." Balint shook his head. "You wound me."
"No, I've been with you
long enough to know your crocodile tears."
For about three years: ever
since a chance meeting when the little hustler had managed to seduce him even
though he swindled Cam out of three hundred credits.
He wouldn't have been able
to do that if Cam hadn't liked what he was looking at in the first place. In
fact, that was what had made Cam go to the table where Balint had
been sitting, with his infamous cups and ball. He'd seen the lissome boy with
the golden hair and mischievous greenish-gray eyes, and knew he wanted to
have him -- although at the time, Cam had only planned on his usual one night .
What he hadn't realized was
that Balint already had other ideas. He'd charmed
and flirted with Cam shamelessly, offering to treat Cam to dinner to
make up for trying to cheat him. Cam had found out that the Gypsy boy had been left on his own
several years before and was making a living the only way he'd learned
how.
Cam, who had basically
raised himself, found a kindred spirit in Balint
and by the end of the night they ended up in Cam's
"bed": a sleeping bag in an abandoned building.
They'd been together in one
form or another from that night on.
Balint let go of him and sighed. "I'll tell you but it won't
matter. We're accepting this job and we're going to the Old Quarter. Knowing
that, do you still want to see?"
"Humor me."
Balint shrugged and then shut his eyes, concentrating as he flipped
over the cards. Then he opened his eyes, shaking his head silently.
"What do you see?"
Cam asked.
"Look Cam," Balint said gently, "I know you're trying to watch
out for us but it's not like we won't be carrying."
"That bad?"
"The Tungstens. We're bringing the Tungstens.
And the handguns."
If Balint
wanted to bring the assault rifles then he knew there was trouble up the
pike. Cam decided that they would come well-prepared with as much
firepower and weaponry they could carry.
Balint scooped up the cards and put them back in the box. He got up
from the chair and threw his arms around Cam, leaning
against him. "Better?"
For some reason, knowing
that his partner was taking Cam's trepidation seriously did make him feel better; even though
the danger wasn't any less real. Now Cam could map out
a strategy. Cam buried his face in Balint's unruly
golden mane, the smell of bergamot and soap tickling Cam's nose and
comforting him with its familiarity. "Yeah."
"Then let's go to
bed." With his arms still around Cam, Balint walked him over to the mattress and they fell down
upon it in a tangle of arms and legs.
"You know what your
problem is, Cammie? You think too damned
much," Balint murmured against Cam's chest, the
vibration of his velvet lips sending a delicious shiver through Cam's body.
Cam smiled, taking Balint into his
arms. "So distract me."
Balint laughed softly. "That can be arranged." He
unbuttoned Cam's jeans and pulled down the zipper. "Always happy to
oblige."
All thoughts of the job
vanished as Cam rapidly melted into a puddle of liquid sensation under Balint's hands and mouth and as Balint's
lips slipped below Cam's bellybutton, he wasn't thinking of anything anymore.
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